Fort Bragg, North Carolina September 2021
I took a deep breath as I stood in the empty hallway, facing the door Iโd been scheduled to walk through for the past two weeks. Foolishly, Iโd thought making the initial call would be the hardest, but it wasnโt. Standing here, staring at the clinical letters beside the door, deciding whether or not to turn the handle, was infinitely harder.
The clinic didnโt have that oversanitized smell that came with hospitals, but weโd never been seen by typical doctors either.
โYou can do it,โ Torres said from my left.
โIf I do, itโs over,โ I replied, keeping my voice low. โYou know theyโll kick me out of the unit.โ
โYeah. And then maybe youโll start living for you. Get some help for those nightmares, too, so youโre not terrified to sleep next to your girl. Youโre not your dad. Youโre never going to be your dad. But still . . . you need the help. You should probably figure out what to do with that farm of yours.โ
I glanced over at him, my hand reaching for the doorknob.
โYou gotta let go, Nate,โ he said, offering me a smile. โYouโve carried shit that isnโt yours for too long. That guilt? Not yours. The career youโre not actually that fond of? Not yours. But Izzy? Sheโs the one whoโs yours. So if you wonโt walk through that door for yourself, consider doing it for her.โ
Izzy.
It had been six weeks since Iโd left her at the Kabul airport so I could give her the one thing I knew she neededโSerena. I missed her with every breath, and yet I knew it wasnโt time yet.
If we had one shot, then I couldnโt blow it.
I took one last look at Torres and then I opened the door and walked through.
Dr. Williamson looked up from his desk with a professional smile and motioned to the chairs in front of his desk. โHowโs it going, Phelan?โ
Usually I would have told him I was fine. That I was sleeping, eating, and relaxing just like I was supposed to.
But lying hadnโt gotten me anywhere, so maybe it was time that I told the truth.
I sank into the chair and looked the doctor in the eye. โIโve been talking to my best friend as a coping mechanism for the stress, the deployments, the . . . everything.โ
He nodded, leaning back in his chair. โThat sounds pretty normal.โ
โYeah, except heโs been dead for four years. Think you can help me?โ I gripped my knees and waited for his answer.
โYes,โ he said. โI think I can help you.โ